From the Thames to the Telford, the Wear to the Wellsbourne; from canoe adventures to ice-skating, from angling to day-dreaming, "Caught by the River" is an exceptional new take on nature writing.
Here, the writers take you on a journey down some of our most famous waterways and some of its best kept secrets. Funny, surprising, delightful and poignant, they all share one thing - a passion for the rivers of Britain and Ireland. The result is a uniquely modern take on an age old writing tradition - a rock 'n' rock nature book even. The authors, many acclaimed and the rest soon to be, each contribute to a collection of writing as varied and unexpected as the rivers themselves. This evocative anthology of the best new nature writing is presented in a collection of essays on some of our favourite rivers, covering the entire length of the country.
A diverse collection of authors share their thoughts, experiences and reminiscences on the river that means something special to them. Contributors include Gavin Pretor-Pinney who retraces a canoe trip his grandfather made 60 years ago, Roger Deakin writes about the history of ice skating in the fens, Jon Savage describes a trip down the Thames with the Sex Pistols, Irvine Welsh recounts the courtship rituals witnessed by the River Forth, plus there are many more contributors including Bill Drummond, Edywn Collins, John Niven, Jarvis Cocker, and Chris Yates to name a few.
The following is an extract taken from 'Caught by the River - A Collection of Words on Water'
John Niven - 'Not Caught By the River'
He seemed like a ‘big boy’ to us at the time although,
of course, looking back now, he was just a kid.
Thirteen or fourteen. Wearing one of those green
army jumpers with patches at the shoulders and elbows.
How he cried.
My little brother and I had come along the bank of the
river Irvine, in Ayrshire, thirty miles south of Glasgow. We’d
been spinning for sea trout up at the weir. The serious fisherman
went for the salmon with flies further up river, in
the shadows of the great Victorian railway bridge. I remember
it being a cold spring morning, incredibly sunny, maybe
the Easter holidays then. When we came around the bend
towards the bridge, there was already a good crowd there,
maybe a dozen or so fishermen, old boys and some kids our
own age, just, or not quite, into their teens. They were all
watching as this kid – his rod bowed into an upturned ‘U’ – did
battle with something huge. There was an air of real excitement, and you got the feeling that this had been going on for a while.
The kid was flanked by a couple of the men, both giving
him advice – when to play out some line and let the fish run,
when to lock the reel – but neither touching the rod or interfering
too much. They were going to let him catch it himself.
I remember his trainers slipping and skidding on the greasy
boulders of the bank, the great anxiety and fierce determination
on his face. The fight went on for a long time, an hour or so, and
for a long time nothing seemed to happen, no one seemed to be
winning, and then one of the old guys said ‘Christ’ and everyone
was piling up behind the kid, straining to see down into the
water. We got a glimpse of white belly as something turned fast
a few feet from the surface. The kid saw it too and suddenly he
looked scared, as though he knew for sure now that he had the
fish of a lifetime on the hook. His legs were shaking, his hands
trembling as they changed position on the rod.
Then, suddenly, with a rush of foam, it broke the surface,
leaping clear of the black water. A great gasp went up. A big
salmon, plump and perfect in the Scottish sunlight, the proud
hook of its lower jaw.
More people gathered – other kids fishing nearby, people
walking past, a crowd maybe thirty strong watching now as
the battle went on. There were many moments where it seemed
certain the line was simply going to break and it would all be
over. But it didn’t. The kid was good. Patient. The fish was tiring.
Finally one of the old guys clambered down into the water with
a green net. There was a terrible moment as he tried to get the
net under the fish, one hand on the twanging line – taut as piano wire – where we were sure the line was going to snap. Another
man scrambled down there and it took two of them to swing the
fish up onto the concrete wall. Everyone jostled to look.
The salmon lay quite still. The enormous swell of its milk
white belly, the iridescent perfection of its colour – blue and
silver and flecks of rose and pink, the great head the size of a
man’s fist and almost black. The kid leant down over his prize,
exhausted and triumphant. The salmon was almost as big as he
was, over three feet long. Maybe thirty pounds. Worth fifteen
or twenty quid easy at the fishmongers: an unthinkable sum
for a teenage boy in a recession-hit, early ’80s Scottish town. (I
remember vicariously picturing the looks on my parent’s faces
if I had staggered in the door holding such a prize.) And there,
in its jaw, was the boy’s red and gold spinner.
In the outside of its jaw.
Everyone saw it. The kid looked up hopefully at one of
the old guys who had helped him land the fish. ‘Snagged it,’
the old boy said sadly. The fish had not taken the bait. It had
been hooked illegally. It had to go back. The kid looked at the
salmon. He looked at the old guy. The old guy put his hand on
the kid’s shoulder as he leaned in with the pliers.
It took two of them to lift it back into the river. It didn’t
swim off right away. It turned slowly in a figure of eight in the
shallow pool for a moment – as though showing the kid all that
he had lost, all he would never have. Then, with a nonchalant
flick of its great tail, it vanished into the depths. The kid –
physically exhausted, emotionally destroyed – burst into tears.
The old guy folded him into his arms and held him while he
sobbed. ‘C’mon son,’ he said. ‘There’ll be other fish.’
We all stared at the river in silence. Finally someone said ‘Whit a boot in the fucken baws,’ and you were powerfully
reminded that you were in Ayrshire, where bad is expected,
where defeat is met with cheerful understatement, and where
tragedy is routinely rebuffed with humour.
A fine part of the world.
Where to Buy:
'Caught by the River - A Collection of Words on Water'
compiled and edited
by Jeff Barrett, Robin Turner and Andrew Walsh.
Published by Cassell
Illustrated, £17.99. www.octopusbooks.co.uk